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On
Myanmar, UN Lee Urged Japan To Not Oppose
SC Action, Kishimori
Bragged of Chef
to Refugees
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
October 29 – When
Yanghee Lee, UN Special
Rapporteur on the situation of
human rights in Myanmar, took
questions on October 26, Inner
City Press asked her about the
government not approving a
replacement for UN Resident
Coordinator Renata
Lok-Dessallien, who is now
leaving at the end of October.
Ms. Lee confirmed that the
government has rejected a UN
Assistant Secretary General
being sent, not wanting that
special attention. Later on
October 26, speaking of UN Security
Council proposals on Myanmar
at a quiet film event hosted
by one of the too-quiet proponents,
Yanghee Lee was quoted
going beyond what she said in
the UN: "#UN Special
Rapporteur on #Myanmar:
#SecurityCouncil needs to
adopt strong #Burma
resolution- appeals to #China
#Japan& #Russia not to
block." The inclusion of Japan
is surprising - or not.
Because on October 27 in the
UN's ECOSOC Chamber, the Japanese
Mission to the UN's Counselor
Mr. Hajime Kishimori chose as
his story to an audience about
sexual violence against women
the time at a camp for Myanmar
refugees in Thailand he asked
a (male) chef to contribute
Japanese recipes to the
"refugee mothers." Video here,
from 31:15. He talked
about an under-covered WAW
meeting in Tokyo, and an upcoming
fifth "Peaces" event in the
UN. Kishimori recounted
bringing UNIQLO clothing from
Japan to refugee women in
Nepal, Ethiopia and Tanzania.
Some of the audience marveled
at the panel's lone male using
as his examples to women,
cooking and clothes. The
moderator Alison Smale said
nothing, perhaps because Japan
is the rapporteur of the
Committee on Information, in
which self-interested speeches
about language rights allow
DPI to claim it is doing a
good job. Then why is Antonio
Guterres ordering outside
consultants? And why was DPI's
propaganda coverage of his
trip to CAR needed, and
so-stand alone? On Myanmar, as
to Russia, its foreign ministry
spokesperson Maria
Zakharova
said, "we
are ready for a constructive
discussion of further steps of
the UNSC on this issue." And
given China's recent absention
on extending the mandate of
the Syria chemical weapons JIM
investigative mechanism while
Russia vetoed and Bolivia
voted no, many are left
wondering about... Japan, as
referenced by Yanghee Lee.
While some might mechanically
cite rifts between Japan and
Yanghee Lee's South Korea (see
for example Japan opposing
registration at UNESCO of
"comfort women" documentation,
Inner City Press story here),
there's more to be said about
Japan, Myanmar and the
Rohingya. Watch this site -
and this: "Simon Henshaw,
Acting Assistant Secretary of
State for the Bureau of
Population, Refugees, and
Migration, will lead a
delegation to Burma and
Bangladesh October 29-November
4 to discuss ways to address
the humanitarian and human
rights concerns stemming from
the Rakhine State crisis and
improve the delivery of
humanitarian assistance to
displaced persons in Burma,
Bangladesh, and the region.
Deputy Assistant Secretary
Scott Busby of the Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights, and
Labor, Acting Deputy Assistant
Secretary Tom Vajda of the
Bureau of South and Central
Asian Affairs, and Office
Director Patricia Mahoney of
the Bureau of East Asian and
Pacific Affairs will accompany
the Acting Assistant
Secretary." In the UN Press
Briefing Room, Yangee Lee on
October 26 told Inner City
Press that a person already in
the country could be interim
Resident Coordinator and that
while a new UN Special Adviser
might be necessary, it would
be important who that person
is. Some might ask, why not
her? Two hours later on
October 26 Inner City Press
aske UN spokesman Farhan Haq,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: on Myanmar
and the UN's presence there,
the Special Rapporteur,
Yanghee Lee, in a press
conference this morning, you
know, acknowledged that the UN
had asked for an Assistant
Secretary-General to replace
Ms. [Renata] Lok-Dessallien
and had been rejected by the
Government. She's… would
be in a position to
know. So, I take… given
that, can you say, one, why
hasn't… why… you know, can…
will you confirm it as a
Secretariat representative?
And where does it stand… given
that we're now 26 October and
the… the Resident Coordinator
is leaving by the end of the
month, where does it stand in
terms of having a replacement?
What did Mr. [Jeffrey] Feltman
leave the country… what was
his understanding in terms of
who would be running the
country team in less than a
week? Deputy Spokesman:
I do expect, in the coming
days, we'll be able to have an
announcement about who will be
the Officer-in-Charge of our
operations in Myanmar.
We're not at that stage yet,
but, like I said, I do expect
to have an announcement
shortly, and we'll have the
details at this point. Inner
City Press: Given that she's
now said that an ASG
[Assistant Secretary-General]
was proposed… I'd asked you
about Mr. Magdy of… of UNDP
[United Nations Development
Programme], whether he was the
one, but it seems like… do you
have a problem confirming
that? She's also a UN
system official or Special
Rapporteur. Is she
wrong? Deputy Spokesman:
I'm not going to dispute the
words of the Special
Rapporteur. We don't go
into the discussions that
we're having on various
positions. Once we have
an announcement to make, like
I said, we'll make it.
We're not at that point just
yet. Yanghee Lee directed
Inner City Press to the Flickr
photographs on her mandate's
website; they are here,
including the toddler she
described in her closing
statement to the Third
Committee on October 25. This
is one side of the UN on human
rights; here is another: the
UN delivered a threat
to Inner City Press to
“review” it accreditation on
Friday afternoon at 5 pm. The
UN official who signed the letter,
when Inner City Press went to
ask about the undefined
violation of live-streaming
Periscope video at a photo op
by UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres, had already
left, minutes after sending
the threat. This comes two
days after Inner City Press asked Guterres about the
UN inaction on threatened
genocide in Cameroon, and the
UN claimed
Guterres hadn't heard the
15-second long question.
It also
comes after Alison Smale the
head of the Department of
Public Information which would
“review” Inner City Press'
accreditation has ignored threeseparatepetitions
from Inner City Press in the
six weeks she has been in the
job, urging her to remove
restrictions on Inner City
Press' reporting which hinder
its coverage of the UN's
performance in such crises as
Yemen,
Kenya,
Myanmar,
and the Central African
Republic where Guterres
travels next week, with
Smale's DPI saying its
coverage of the trip will be a
test of its public relations
ability. But the UN official
who triggered the complaint is
Maher Nasser, who filled in
for Smale before she arrived.
His complaint is that audio of
what he said to Inner City
Press as it staked out the
elevators in the UN lobby
openly recording, as it has
for example
with Cameroon's Ambassador
Tommo Monthe, here,
was similarly published.
A UN “Public Information”
official is complaining about
an article, and abusing his
position to threaten to review
Inner City Press'
accreditation. The UN has
previously been called
out for targeting Inner
City Press, and for having no
rules or due process.
But the UN is entirely
UNaccountable, impunity on
censorship as, bigger picture,
on the cholera it brought to
Haiti. And, it seems, Antonio
Guterres has not reformed or
reversed anything. This threat
is from an official involved
in the last round of
retaliation who told Inner
City Press on Twitter to be
less "negative" about the UN -
amid inaction on the mass
killing in Cameroon - and who
allowed pro-UN hecking of
Inner City Press' questions
about the cholera the UN
brought to Haiti and the Ng
Lap Seng /John Ashe UN bribery
scandal which resulted in six
guilty verdicts. We'll have
more on this.
***
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